Rational design of an artificial genetic switch: co-option of the H-NS-repressed proU operon by the VirB virulence master regulator
Citation:
Kane KA, Dorman CJ, Rational design of an artificial genetic switch: co-option of the H-NS-repressed proU operon by the VirB virulence master regulator, Journal of Bacteriology, 193, 21, 2011, 5950 - 5960Download Item:
Abstract:
The H-NS protein represses the transcription of hundreds of genes in Gram-negative bacteria. De-repression is achieved by a multitude of mechanisms, many of which involve binding of a protein to DNA at the repressed promoter in a manner that compromises the maintenance of the H-NS-DNA nucleoprotein repression complex. The principal virulence gene promoters in Shigella flexneri, the cause of bacillary dysentery, are repressed by H-NS. VirB, a protein that closely resembles members of the ParB family of plasmid partitioning proteins, derepresses the operons that encode the main structural components and the effector proteins of the S. flexneri type III secretion system. Bioinformatic analysis suggests that VirB has been co-opted into its current role as an H-NS antagonist in S. flexneri. To test this hypothesis, the potential for VirB to act as a positive regulator of proU, an operon that is repressed by H-NS, was assessed. Although VirB has no known relationship with the osmo-regulated proU operon, it could relieve H-NS-mediated repression when the parS-like VirB binding site was placed appropriately upstream of the RpoD-dependent proU promoter. These results reveal the remarkable facility with which novel regulatory circuits can evolve, at least among those promoters that are repressed by H-NS.
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Grant Number
Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)
Author's Homepage:
http://people.tcd.ie/cjdormanDescription:
PUBLISHEDPublished online 26 August 2011
Author: DORMAN, CHARLES; KANE, KELLY
Sponsor:
Science Foundation Ireland (SFI)Type of material:
Journal ArticleCollections
Series/Report no:
Journal of Bacteriology193
21
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Full text availableSubject:
Genetics, gene repression, Shigella flexneriSubject (TCD):
Genes & Society , Nanoscience & MaterialsMetadata
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